In the wake of the deadly August 2017 rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, the former chief diversity officer of the Department of Veteran Affairs was discouraged from posting a more forceful condemnation of the white supremacists and neo-Nazis who participated, according to internal emails obtained by a watchdog group.

‘We’re not the one who need to be careful,’ neo-Nazi texted mom before Charlottesville rally. A judge ruled that the text message and the accompanying meme showing Adolf Hitler could be presented to jurors as they decide whether James A. Fields, 21, is guilty of first-degree murder and other counts. >>

Charlottesville driver hinted counterprotesters 'need to be careful' before attack. The murder trial is ongoing. >>

Charlottesville driver showed NO remorse before or after he killed woman with his car. The news comes as two witnesses also shared that James Alex Fields Jr. showed no remorse prior to ramming into the counterprotestors and killing Heather Heyer. >>

Charlottesville murder suspect wanted to get lunch with fellow protesters before fatal crash, witness says. Shortly after two protesters declined James Fields' invitation to lunch, Fields plowed into a group of counterprotesters, killing a 32-year-old woman. >>

Charlottesville suspect shared picture of Hitler with his mother days before Unite the Right rally, prosecutors say. Prosecutors want to admit Fields' text messages with his mother, but the defense argues it'll lead to prejudice against him. >>

Charlottesville victims recount life-altering injuries at trial. James Fields is accused of first degree murder over the killing of 32-year-old paralegal Heather Heyer, as well as hit-and-run charges and eight counts of causing serious injury >>

Couple testify on driver’s demeanor at Virginia rally. “He didn’t seem like the kind of person who would do that,” testified a woman who had met James A. Fields Jr. shortly before he is alleged to have driven his car at high speed into a crowd of counterprotesters at the planned Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer. >>

Don’t condemn white nationalists, Veterans Affairs’ diversity chief was told after Charlottesville, emails show. After President Trump’s controversial reaction to the deadly violence, VA leaders had a tense exchange over how the agency should respond. >>

Driver in Charlottesville rally never braked, photographer testifies. A photojournalist who took a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of the car plowing into a crowd of counterprotesters during a white nationalist rally in Virginia last year said in court on Friday that no image in the series showed its brake lights on. >>

Driver sent Hitler text to his mom before deadly Charlottesville rally. James Alex Fields, 21, sent a series of texts to his mother prior to the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in August last year. >>

Hymns then blood: victims testify at Charlottesville rally trial. Before the car hit him, there was an upbeat atmosphere among those protesting a white nationalist rally in Virginia last year, a student recalled in court on Friday. >>

In Charlottesville Murder Trial, Courtroom Relives Trauma of a Violent Day. The trial of James Fields Jr., who drove into a crowd of protesters, has led to an odd reunion more than a year after a deadly rally. >>

Texted photo of Hitler to be weighed by jury in trial of Charlottesville protest killer. Heather Heyer was killed after James Fields drove his car into her and other counterprotesters, badly injuring others >>

What you missed last week in the trial of the Charlottesville driver -- and what to expect this week. Prosecutors could rest their case as early as Tuesday in Charlottesville, Virginia, where James Alex Fields is standing trial for a deadly car crash at a white nationalist rally that killed one counterprotester and injured others in August 2017. >>

White nationalist rally victim 'pulseless' after crash: rescue worker. The woman killed by a car at a 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, looked lifeless after being struck, the rescue worker who tried to save her life testified on Monday at the trial of the man charged with murdering her. >>